Need a dock for your Nokia Lumia 900? If you’re as talented as this proud new owner, all you have to do is go to your local Toys R Us and pick up a box of LEGOs. Baris Eris recently did a post about a fantastic custom dock built for his shiny new Lumia, and just like their similar creation for the Samsung Focus it’s an impressive mini-engineering feat.

For those looking to replicate this dock for themselves, the site has kindly provided some detailed pointers about the hardest part of the dock — the USB charging wire — as well as the rest of the structure.

Check out more photos and the full how-to article at the source link below.

Author Description

Saad Hashmi

Founder of Windows Phone Daily. Currently pursuing a Bachelor's degree in Marketing and Information Systems. While procrastinating on that goal I write, play games a little too often, and watch exorbitant amounts of mediocre half-hour comedies because I lack the patience to watch hour-long dramas that are probably better. Follow me on Twitter: @Saad073

Recent Comments

Does it really matter what US network carries this? It's probably the least favoured platform in the US already... their market share is tiny. If they're lucky they might want to emphasize where it's going and when it's getting there in some markets that are already shrinking due to a lack of product.Ms ... half hearted as always...Xin: on AT&T and T-Mobile will carry the Lumia 640 and Lumia 640 XL

Having the tab bar at the top is a big mistake in my eyes -- that's just not going to be friendly for one-handed use, and where Pivots meant you could swipe between sections, that's gone now in favour of swipe to delete.Meanwhile, some apps are putting sections into hamburger menus, which will also be more difficult to reach and arguably reduce user engagement since important sections are now being hidden away from where before they'd be part of a parorama or pivot.I think most of these changes have been made because Microsoft needed a model that'd scale to desktop windowed apps, the old model of pivots and panoramas just wasn't a great fit outside of tablets and phones.Elsewhere, it just doesn't look as nice or as fluid. Windows Phone's UI was designed as a typographic interface where white text was floating in 3D space over a black background (or vice versa), which led to some pretty striking animation as you moved forwards through apps.That's evidently gone, and with Pivots and Panoramas being buried across the board, ModernUI's defining feature is no longer how it works, just how it looks. Except everyone's gone flat now at this stage.Fronkhead: on Modern UI Comparison: Windows 10 versus Windows Phone 8.1